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ArtikelLocal Militia and State Power in Nationalist China  
Oleh: Mccord, Edward A.
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Modern China vol. 25 no. 2 (Apr. 1999), page 115-141.
Topik: Nationalist China
Fulltext: 115.pdf (97.44KB)
Isi artikelThroughout the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth century, the organization of local community defense forces, or militia, was a common Chinese response to periods of civilwar, popular rebellion, or social disorder. As such, it is hardly surprising to find an increasing level of militia mobilization leading up to and peaking in the “Nanjing decade” (1927-1937) of Nationalist Party (Guomindang) rule. Precisely because the organization of militia was a recurring theme in modern Chinese history, the proliferation of militia in the Nationalist period raises certain questions about the significance of this phenomenon to our understanding of state-society relations in this period. In his groundbreaking study of local militarization in the mid-nineteenth century, Philip Kuhn (1970) showed how the organization of militia in the face of widespread rebellions marked a devolution of power from the weakened Qing state to local elites. Given such historical precedents, one might hypothesize that the widespread mobilization of militia during the Nanjing decade indicated a basic weakness in the Nationalist government’s relationship to local elites and a clue to its ultimate failure to achieve broader state-building objectives.
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